ensure your welcome wt.th a rentano.s ook ox rentano.s C]]OOKSELLERS to the 1f/óR[n BRyant 9-5700- 586 Fifth Avenue, [I West 47th] - MwIórl{ w ^ S H 1 N G TON . PHI L ^ 0 E L PHI. ^ . P ^ R 1 S sua I NI AllOver America! .J; D o something different this year! Get off the beaten path!... A trip to America's land of the midnight sun. Down the romantic Mississippi by river boat. A vacation on an Indian reserva- tion. HAdventure" voyages to little known places. Visit Folk and Music Festivals. .. Hundreds of thrilling, unusual vacations (including unique vacations for single men and single women) to choose from-for less than $50 or more, for a week or months - described completely by Robert Spiers Beniamin, noted N. Y. Times travel writer, in THE V ACA- TION GUIDE. Get this new 329-page book today! All bookstores. $2.50.. or direct from WHITTLESEY HOUSE 330 W. 42nd St., N. Y. c. The VACATION GUIDE tells: What it will cost, time re- quired, what to do, what to wear, what the food is like-every- thing you wan t t 0 know. 'lo R OLLING DOWN TO RIO" on the tides of increased trade with our Good Neighbors? Learn Spanish or Portuguese, "like-a- native" at Berlitz. Free trial lesson. ':'_ - \:I Jí ,:0 r - BERLITZ School of Languages 630 Fifth Ave. (at 50th St. Þ CI 6..1416 the less in teresting to the general reader. The first half is a picaresque account of Mr. Ameringer's early life in Germany and his odd adventures as a young man in this country. It's funny and touching and noble-noble because Mr. Amerin- ger is a noble fellow who has been told so often and pays no attention to the fact. I enjoyed particularly the Cincinnati chapters; his experiences as an itinerant musician (he's almost as good a clarinet- ist as he is a labor journalist); the story of how he lived for several weeks on a counterfeit quarter; the Mencken- esque beer rhapsodies; the hilarious ac- count of the abortive Conservatory of Art and Music in Calvin, Texas; the detailed narrative of how he brought IVlarx-or thought he did-to Okla- homa in 1907. He still edits the Amer- ican Guardian, a small Oklahoma paper whose influence extends far beyond the state. Most young radicals of today, I sup- pose, would turn their noses up and to the left at Mr. Ameringer's unrecon- structed, old-fashioned Eugene Debs So- cialism. I'm no judge of his abilities as a radical thinker, but I do feel he has in him at times the essence of the real humorist. In his introduction, Carl Sandburg, who ought to know, says that::. when the going is good with Oscar .'::: Ameringer, "he is equal to the best of ID ì )o Artemus Ward and Petroleum Vesu- vi us Nasby." To me, he seems more like Will Rogers. But he has a dimen- sion Will Rogers lacked. I don't know .> what to call it; maybe it's just intelli- ' : gence. V\Till Rogers was "shrewd," a word which means that he stopped short of really ripping the cover off things. In his prime, he made many telling remarks about politicians, for example, but he would have been incapable of this char- acteristic Ameringer sentence: "Politics is the art by which politicians obtain campaign contributions from the rich and votes from the poor on the pretext of protecting each from the other." S TILL another autobiography this week, much more serious and book- ish than Mr. Ameringer's, is "The Con- fessions of an Individualist," by William Henry Chamberlin. You will know Mr. Chamberlin as the Christian Science Monitor correspondent whose dispatch- es from Russia and Japan during the past fifteen years have been models of their kind. Despite the come-on title, the book is completely unsensational. It's the record of how one man, brought up in an intellectual, bohemian environ- ment, became a Communist sympathiz- er, changed over to democratic indi- 91 f/Iß I . . B . . . ': .:'JX: /!?: :..: ::;::;:. i -:::: ",:. I : . :'.,: "'. t .- -=: ,:-:"'':- '::;.:,-:-: ,:::::'::;:' , le::::<< < ;:..,:::.....: i/.. ! J * r íl IiNDlfD IVHIS Ef ::':::::'::>:':l iM tfCU4/cwrl I '--- : C"Asr. fJ I /'J.!.$ 8l!o;'ed '0111<4 .} I - ... w.!i.!. STILI IN(' . . , bi, ,lo'" .,....;..;;''''.:.... ú.s 0..1<<. .A).. I ":::::""H' : "" < . .Ied.: a./'...ott..1/4. . -=- - ==-' . . -:. .. Discover the favorite whiskey of metropolitan connoisseurs. . . The Perfectly Balanced Blend . . . at a Budget-Balancing Price. ARSTA RS White Seal A SUPERB BLENDED WHISKEY FOR THE MAN WHO CARES 86.8 Proof. 72 % grain neutral spirits. Copyright 1940, Carstairs Bros. Distilling Co., Inc., New York City